Books on practical electronics?

AI Thread Summary
There is a recognized gap in practical electronics knowledge among those with a theoretical background in electrical engineering. Recommendations for bridging this gap include "The Art of Electronics" by Horowitz and Hill and "Analog Electronics for Scientific Applications" by Baarnal, though these are not focused on troubleshooting. For practical troubleshooting, "Troubleshooting Analog Circuits" by Bob Pease is suggested, along with resources from Sam Goldwasser's website. Engaging with consumer electronics is seen as a relaxing way to apply theoretical knowledge. Overall, a combination of books and online resources can help improve practical skills in electronics.
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Hi all.

I've come to realize there's a giant gap in my electrical engineering knowledge. I've studied plenty of math, physics, circuit analysis, and digital electronics but yet can't figure out how to troubleshoot consumer electronic devices or construct simple gadgets. When I open up a DVD player and look at all the electronic components I think, "wtf?! where can I utilize my knowledge of boolean algebra and the superposition theorem to fix this piece of sh_t?" I've browsed through amazon's list of electronics books and the reviews don't really help. I'm leaning towards . Does anybody have any recommendations?
 
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Take a look at the video on this site is this what you want to be doing?
http://www.g4tv.com/videos/index.html?video_key=9022
 
The Art of Electronics, Horowitz and Hill
Analog Electronics for Scientific Application, Baarnal
do a good job of bridging the gap but are not troubleshooting texts

For that, its a combination.
The best web resourse is Sam Goldwasser http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/sam/trnintro.htm

A good book is:
Troubleshooting Analog Circuits, Bob Pease

As well as books by Joe Carr.

Consumer gear is a nice break from the lab for me. I find it a relaxing pastime. At least with consumer gear, you know it worked at one time, unlike the prototype that makes you think its firmware one hour, and hardware the next, all the while its a little solder ball under the 144 pin IC.

Ron
 
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